(CNN)While the need for mask wearing never fully dissipated during the pandemic, guidance from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in May that removed restrictions for vaccinated individuals was a welcome harbinger of a possible return to normalcy.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/24/health/us-coronavirus-saturday/index.html

    Biden’s broader remarks focused on his administration’s work to end the pandemic and turn around the economy, pass trillions of dollars in infrastructure and social programs like the child tax credit, reduce drug prices and raise taxes on the wealthy to pay for it.

    But his centering of Trump in the off-year Virginia race offered a preview for how he and leading Democrats plan to approach the long shadow Trump has cast over Republicans. In Virginia, Trump has endorsed Youngkin on three separate occasions, and Democrats are crossing their fingers that Biden’s appearance would draw Trump to holding an event for the GOP nominee.

    “As Democrats, we have to show we do understand, and we’re delivering for them, and we’re keeping our promises,” he continued. “We just have to keep making the case, just as the Republican Party today offers nothing but fears and lies and broken promises.”

    The rally, before a mostly maskless crowd of nearly 3,000 people in Arlington, comes just over 100 days before the election in Virginia, which will pit McAuliffe in his comeback bid against Youngkin, a first-time candidate and former Carlyle Group executive.

    Biden’s speech opened with a focus on the pandemic and the rising coronavirus cases across the country. “What we have now is a pandemic of the unvaccinated,” he said, saying “a lot of our conservative friends” had “seen the Lord” on embracing vaccinations. He cited Alabama GOP Gov. Kay Ivey’s frustration with “unvaccinated folks” in her state.

    The gubernatorial election in the commonwealth has nearly always cut against the party in power. For the last 40 years, just one candidate won the governorship while his party controlled the White House: McAuliffe, who secured a narrow victory in 2013.

    “This off-year election, the country’s looking,” Biden said.

    Biden and his aides are eager to use the race to show that the president will be committed to party building, hoping to avert down-ballot wipeouts. The rally came on the heels of the Democratic National Committee announcing it would spend at least $5 million in Virginia ahead of the election, which the party called its “biggest investment in the commonwealth in history.”

    Public polling in the race has been sparse, but it is expected to be closer than Biden’s 10-point victory over Trump — and outgoing Gov. Ralph Northam’s runaway win in 2017 — with McAuliffe as a slight favorite.

    And publicly, McAuliffe and his team have maintained this race is neck and neck. “I need your help,” he told the crowd. “I need you to work every single day and night. Sleep is way overrated.”

    McAuliffe and other Virginia Democrats have also sought to tie Youngkin to Trump.

    “Why is it that Glenn Youngkin and Donald Trump are so close?” McAuliffe said at the rally.

    Youngkin’s camp insists that McAuliffe is the one with Trump ties. A truck with a digital billboard playing an ad from the campaign highlighting that Trump has donated to McAuliffe’s previous campaign circled the rally venue.

    “It’s totally dishonest for Terry McAuliffe to use President Trump’s endorsement to smear Glenn Youngkin, when McAuliffe is actually friends with Trump and took thousands of dollars from Trump to fund his campaign,” Youngkin spokesperson Matt Wolking said, invoking the Clintons as well.

    McAuliffe’s message also focused heavily on the economy during his tenure in Richmond. He, too, praised the coronavirus recovery package. “The American Rescue Plan has injected new life into our economy,’ McAuliffe said.

    The rally also comes a day after McAuliffe released his first general election TV ad. AdImpact, an ad tracking firm, traced at least $525,000 in TV ad spending from McAuliffe that started on Thursday and runs through next Wednesday. In the ad, McAuliffe calls Youngkin “a loyalist to Donald Trump.”

    Youngkin, meanwhile, has been on the air nearly uninterrupted since the early June Democratic primary — and uncontested until this week.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/23/biden-youngkin-trump-mcauliffe-campaign-500713

    The Biden administration is not mandating COVID-19 vaccines for White House staff, press secretary Jen Psaki said Friday. 

    During the White House press briefing Thursday, Psaki suggested that every White House official had been offered a COVID-19 vaccine, but clarified Friday that the White House was not requiring officials to be vaccinated. 

    PSAKI CONFIRMS MORE BREAKTHROUGH COVID-19 CASES IN WHITE HOUSE THAT WERE NOT PREVIOUSLY DISCLOSED

    “No, we have not mandated it,” Psaki responded, after being asked whether the administration was mandating White House staff receive a coronavirus vaccine. 

    Psaki did not provide a specific number of how many White House officials have been vaccinated against the novel coronavirus, but said that they are able to track the number of individuals on the president’s staff because “they are vaccinated here in the White House medical unit.” 

    As for those who have not been vaccinated, Psaki maintained the public health guidance remains the same for White House officials as for other Americans. 

    “Any individual who has chosen not to be vaccinated, same as in the press corp, the public health guidance is to wear a mask,” Psaki said. “That is the public health guidance for employees as well.” 

    WHITE HOUSE SAYS ‘UNVACCINATED PEOPLE SHOULD BE MORE FEARFUL’ THAN VACCINATED OF COVID DELTA VARIANT

    Psaki’s comments come after the news that a vaccinated White House official, as well as a vaccinated aide for House Speaker Pelosi, tested positive for COVID-19 after attending the same event. 

    Earlier this week, Psaki said “there have been” other breakthrough positive COVID cases among White House staffers, and maintained the administration’s commitment to disclose positive COVID-19 tests among “commissioned officers.” 

    “According to an agreement we made during the transition, we committed we would release information proactively,” Psaki said, adding that they “continue to abide by that commitment.”

    Meanwhile, Psaki said that the Centers from Disease Control and Prevention are tracking breakthrough cases throughout the country. 

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/biden-mandating-covid-vaccines-for-white-house

    Meanwhile, exhausted health providers say they are bracing for case spikes that are largely preventable, driven by the hyper-transmissible delta variant. “We are frustrated, tired and worried for this next surge — and saddened by the state we find ourselves in,” said Jason Yaun, a Memphis-based pediatrician, who said his colleagues are grappling with an “accumulation of fatigue” since the outbreak exploded in March 2020.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2021/07/23/anger-targets-vaccine-holdouts-delta-surge/

    Members of the House Freedom Caucus are calling on Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy to use a procedural tactic to remove Speaker Nancy Pelosi from her leadership post, citing her decision to block Reps. Jim Banks and Jim Jordan from the Jan. 6 select committee.

    In a letter sent to McCarthy (R-Calif.) on Friday, the conservative group accused Pelosi (D-Calif.) of holding “an authoritarian reign” over the lower chamber, arguing her recent actions warrant moving forward with vacating the chair.

    “We, the House Freedom Caucus, respectfully request that you pursue the authorization of the House Republican Conference, pursuant to Conference rules, to file and bring up a privileged motion by July 31, 2021, to vacate the chair and end Nancy Pelosi’s authoritarian reign as Speaker of the House,” they wrote.

    “Rule IX, Clause 3 of the Rules of the House of Representatives for the One Hundred Seventeenth Congress requires that ‘A resolution causing a vacancy in the Office of Speaker shall not be privileged except if offered by direction of a party caucus or conference.’”

    Republicans have been highly critical of Pelosi’s rejection of Banks (R-Ind.) and Jordan (R-Ohio), two of former President Donald Trump’s strongest allies in Congress, alleging it proves the panel is politically motivated. Pelosi announced the ouster of the two McCarthy choices for the committee — which is tasked with investigating the deadly siege on the Capitol when pro-Trump rioters attempted to disrupt the certification of the election — on Wednesday.

    Members of the Freedom Caucus are calling Nancy Pelosi’s blocking Reps. Jim Banks and Jim Jordan “authoritarian.”
    AP/J. Scott Applewhite

    Banks was McCarthy’s choice to be the top Republican on the panel as the ranking member.

    The committee — led by Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) — also pointed to Pelosi’s decision to extend proxy voting initially put in place at the start of the pandemic and require members to walk through magnetometers before entering the chamber as examples of what they feel are abuses of power.

    “Speaker Pelosi’s tenure is destroying the House of Representatives and our ability to faithfully represent the people we are here to serve. Speaker Pelosi has championed unconstitutional changes like allowing proxy voting and insulting security measures like metal detectors for Members coming to the floor to vote,” the letter says.

    Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy received a letter from members of the Freedom Caucus calling for Nancy Pelosi’s ouster.
    Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

    “Less easily reversible is the damage done to the institution by the Leadership of one party dictating the ability of Members of another party to serve in roles at the discretion of their own conference. That abuse cannot go unchecked. Speaker Pelosi’s refusal to seat Rep. Jim Jordan  and Rep. Jim Banks on the Select Committee to Investigate January 6 is intolerable.”

    The lawmakers also pointed to Democrats voting to remove controversial GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) from her committee assignments after a string of inflammatory social media posts emerged from before she was in Congress.

    “That this follows the intolerable action of unseating another Republican from her committees makes clear that Speaker Pelosi has no interest in representative democracy, let alone protecting institutional norms. Republicans, under your leadership, must show the American people that we will act to protect our ability to represent their interests,” they continued.

    Rep. Andy Biggs is the leader of the Freedom Caucus.
    Michael Brochstein/Sipa USA

    Should McCarthy opt to move forward with forcing the Pelosi vote, it faces a nearly impossible path to passage in the Democrat-controlled lower chamber. But the California Republican could feel pressure to act, with the House Freedom Caucus providing a pivotal bloc of votes needed to obtain the speaker’s gavel should Republicans take back the House in the midterms.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/07/23/freedom-caucus-pushes-mccarthy-to-remove-pelosi-as-speaker/

    July 23 (Reuters) – The Miami-Dade County fire and rescue department on Friday declared an end to its search for human remains in the rubble of a Florida condominium tower that collapsed on June 24, killing at least 97 people.

    Authorities said one victim was still believed to be unaccounted for. The Miami-Dade Police Department will continue to sift through what is left of the debris pile for additional remains and personal effects, officials said in a statement.

    The fire department’s round-the-clock operation at the beachfront site of the Champlain Towers South condo, in the Miami suburb of Surfside, was demobilized four weeks and a day after the 40-year-old, 12-story structure gave way at about 1:30 a.m. as residents slept.

    “At this step in the recovery process it has become increasingly challenging to identify victims, and we are relying heavily on the work of the medical examiner’s office and the scientific, technical process of identifying human remains,” Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said in a statement.

    She hailed members of the search and recovery teams as “true superheroes.”

    No one has been pulled alive from the mounds of pulverized concrete, splintered lumber and twisted metal since the early hours after the collapse, and authorities formally gave up hope of finding any survivors on July 7.

    County officials said in a statement that the confirmed death toll stands at 97 – 96 victims whose remains were recovered from the wreckage and one victim who died while hospitalized.

    “We believe there is one victim still unaccounted for,” the statement said. It was not made clear whether the individual’s remains had not been recovered or whether positive identification had yet to be made.

    Investigators have yet to determine what caused about half of the 136-unit highrise to cave in on itself in one of the deadliest building collapses in U.S. history. The portion of the structure that was left standing, but unstable, was deliberately demolished about 10 days later.

    A 2018 engineering report found structural deficiencies that are now the focus of several inquiries, including a grand jury investigation. read more

    The disaster has prompted officials across South Florida to study residential buildings for signs of poor construction or structural weaknesses.

    In a ceremony marking the end of the fire department’s role in the search, recovery team members rode in a procession of emergency vehicles across the causeway over Biscayne Bay into Miami, greeted by a fire boat water-cannon salute.

    “Providing closure to families was the ultimate test of everybody here,” Scott Dean, leader of one of the two task forces that worked in 12-hour shifts at the disaster site, said at a welcome-home gathering at Fire and Rescue headquarters.

    Fire Chief Alan Cominsky said: “I couldn’t be prouder of the men and women that represent Miami-Dade Fire Rescue.”

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/florida-firefighters-end-their-search-remains-miami-area-condo-collapse-2021-07-23/

    As the more contagious Delta variant sows more coronavirus infections among the country’s unvaccinated, it has also started to send more unprotected Americans to the hospital, straining health care centers in portions of the Midwest, the West and the South.



    Shows 7-day average by hospital service area. Hover for details.

    Shows 7-day average by hospital service area. Use two fingers to pan and zoom. Tap for details.


    Covid-19 hospitalizations are trending upward in 45 states, though levels remain well below previous peaks. In parts of the country with relatively low vaccination rates, including Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Nevada, hospitalizations have increased more rapidly.

    Hospital staff members and health officials in these areas say the rise has come quickly and unexpectedly, driven by the more aggressive Delta variant, low vaccination coverage and their communities’ return to the social activities of pre-pandemic life.

    At Mercy Hospital in Springfield, Mo., in a county where just over a third of the population is fully vaccinated, staff say that this summer’s surge in patients came nearly five times as fast as last fall. In just over a month, the hospital’s Covid patient count grew to 115 from 26, and it briefly faced a shortage of ventilators.

    And now with 155 Covid patients, the hospital has far surpassed its last peak, and expects to see more than 200 patients by early August. To prepare, it’s readying a third I.C.U. for patients with Covid-19.

    “I think any community that has low vaccination rates and has not experienced this yet, better get ready,” said Erik Frederick, chief administrative officer at Mercy Hospital Springfield. “Because what we are seeing with this Delta variant, it’s not an ‘if,’ it’s a ‘when.’”

    Hospital and state officials across the country report that a vast majority of people hospitalized with Covid-19 are unvaccinated. Nationally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 97 percent of patients who have gone to the hospital with Covid-19 haven’t been immunized.

    And while breakthrough cases and hospitalizations can happen for those who are vaccinated, officials say that these patients tend to be less sick because the vaccines are highly protective against severe illness and death.

    Vaccination patterns — and the high rates of coverage among the country’s oldest and lower rates among the young — also seem to have changed who is coming to the hospital.

    “We have seen the elderly population like we had before,” said Shannon Nachtigal, the chief nursing officer at Baxter Regional Medical Center in Mountain Home, Ark. “But with this surge they are definitely more of a younger group, people in their 30s and 40s.”

    Read more: Some Florida Hospitals Have More Covid Patients Than Ever Before

    At Mercy Springfield in Missouri, just over half of patients are under the age of 60.

    “You walk through the I.C.U.s and you just look and you’re like, ‘Wow, those people don’t look much older than me,’” added Mr. Frederick, who is 48. “It’s a little alarming to see.”

    National data reveal a similar shift. While the overall number of people newly admitted to the hospital with Covid-19 each day is lower now than it was in January, the share of those admitted under age 60 has grown. In July, about 54 percent of new admissions were people under 60, and in early January it was 36 percent.


    The Delta variant’s ability to spread may also be to blame for the shifting demographics of people going to the hospital with Covid.

    “If it’s more transmissible, it’s more likely to also transmit to healthy individuals as well as people who are less healthy,” said Dr. Thomas Tsai, an assistant professor of health policy at Harvard University. “You may have an increase in hospitalizations just because you are putting a broader swath of individuals at risk.”

    But with the vaccine readily available to most Americans, hospital staff say it has been frustrating to watch people of all ages suffer when there is now a weapon to fight back.

    “It makes me so sad that we are doing this again, because it is so preventable at this point,” said Dr. Rachel C. Keech, an inpatient physician serving Mercy Hospital’s eastern Missouri region, who helped the Mercy Springfield location in recent weeks.

    “The first three waves, we didn’t have this great tool of vaccines and now we do,” she added. “It’s really heartbreaking.”

    Tracking the Coronavirus



    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/07/23/us/covid-coronavirus-hospitalizations-per-state.html

    Canada’s “path to protection” will be open to Afghans with a “significant and enduring relationship” with the Canadian government, although officials did not elaborate on how that would be defined. Those eligible, they said, could include interpreters, locally engaged embassy staff members, as well as a host of other locals who assisted the war effort such as cooks, drivers, cleaners, security guards and their families.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/07/23/canada-afghanistan-interpreters/

    ATLANTA (AP) — At first glance, Herschel Walker has a coveted political profile for a potential Senate candidate in Georgia.

    He was a football hero at the University of Georgia before his long NFL career. He’s a business owner whose chicken products are distributed across the U.S. And he’s a Black conservative with backing from former President Donald Trump, a longtime friend.

    But an Associated Press review of hundreds of pages of public records tied to Walker’s business ventures and his divorce, including many not previously reported, sheds new light on a turbulent personal history that could dog his Senate bid. The documents detail accusations that Walker repeatedly threatened his ex-wife’s life, exaggerated claims of financial success and alarmed business associates with unpredictable behavior.

    Walker, now 59, has at times been open about his long struggle with mental illness, writing at length in a 2008 book about being diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder, once known as multiple personality disorder. But it’s unclear how he would discuss these events as a candidate.

    Walker did not respond to requests for comment. Multiple emails went unanswered, although his executive assistant confirmed they were received. AP also sent emails and left a message with his long-time attorney, who did not respond.

    The Georgia seat is a top target for Republicans as they try to take control of the U.S. Senate in next year’s midterm elections. Walker’s potential bid is a wildcard. He might easily win the GOP primary with Trump’s help, setting up a general election fight against Democrat Raphael Warnock, who became Georgia’s first Black senator after a special election in January. But Republican leaders in Washington and Georgia are concerned that Walker’s history might haunt his campaign.

    Walker “certainly could bring a lot of things to the table,” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, said in a recent interview. “But as others have mentioned, there’s also a lot of questions out there.”

    Walker has yet to announce his intentions, but he has been consulting with political advisers in Georgia. A native of tiny Wrightsville, between Atlanta and Savannah, the former Dallas Cowboys star retired after the 1997 season and now resides in Texas. In a video posted to Twitter last month, he revs the engine of a sports car and says, “I’m getting ready, and we can run with the big dogs,” before revealing a Georgia license plate.

    The Twitter tease intensified buzz about the potential for a celebrity candidate. But it also helped surface details about Walker’s troubled past, many first disclosed by Walker himself in his 2008 book, “Breaking Free.”

    His account details years of struggles and an eventual diagnosis in 2001. Walker describes himself dealing with as many as a dozen personalities — or “alters” — that he had constructed as a defense against bullying he suffered as a stuttering, overweight child.

    In an AP interview at the time, Walker emphasized his purpose was to help others with similar disorders. “People say, ‘Herschel is just trying to write something to make money,’” he said. “I say, ‘Guys, why would I write something like this to make money?’”

    The National Alliance on Mental Illness describes dissociative identity disorder as “alternating between multiple identities,” leaving a person with “gaps in memory of everyday events.” It notes men with the disorder “exhibit more violent behavior rather than amnesia.”

    In his book, Walker acknowledges violent urges. He writes that he played Russian roulette and recounts sitting at his kitchen table in 1991 pointing a gun, loaded with a single bullet, at his head. “I wasn’t suicidal,” Walker explained, but “just looked at mortality as the ultimate challenge.”

    The book is framed as a turnaround story. He describes it as cathartic and casts himself as someone on the path to “integration” because of therapy and his Christian faith.

    A watershed moment, he writes, came in February 2001, when he drove around suburban Dallas, hunting for a man who he said was avoiding his calls after being days late delivering a car Walker had purchased.

    “The logical side of me knew that what I was thinking of doing to this man — murdering him for messing up my schedule — wasn’t a viable alternative,” Walker wrote. “But another side of me was so angry that all I could think was how satisfying it would feel to step out of the car, pull out the gun, slip off the safety, and squeeze the trigger.”

    Ultimately, Walker wrote, he had a change of heart after seeing a “SMILE. JESUS LOVES YOU” bumper sticker on the man’s car-hauling truck. He decided to seek professional help.

    “I’d been running for most of life, from what only I really knew but seldom talked about. It was time to stop running and face some harsh realities,” he wrote.

    Walker’s threatening behavior continued well after the 2001 revelation, according to court records obtained by AP that have not previously been reported.

    Four years later, in December 2005, Cindy Grossman, Walker’s ex-wife, secured a protective order against him, alleging violent and controlling behavior.

    Grossman has said she was long a victim of Walker’s impulses. When his book was released, she told ABC News that at one point during their marriage, her husband pointed a pistol at her head and said, “I’m going to blow your f’ing brains out.” She filed for divorce in 2001, citing “physically abusive and extremely threatening behavior.”

    In seeking protection from a judge in Dallas County, Grossman filed an affidavit from her sister, which described Walker as unwilling to accept that his former wife had begun dating another man.

    Grossman told the court she got calls during that period from her sister and father, both of whom had been contacted by Walker. He told family members that he would kill her and her new boyfriend, according to Maria Tsettos, Cindy Grossman’s sister.

    In an affidavit, Tsettos claimed Walker once called looking for his ex-wife while she was out with her boyfriend. Tsettos took the call and said Walker became “very threatening” when told of Grossman’s whereabouts. In Tsettos’ recollection, Walker “stated unequivocally that he was going to shoot my sister Cindy and her boyfriend in the head.”

    On another occasion, Tsettos said she talked to Walker “at length” after he’d reached out to her online. He “expressed to me that he was frustrated with (Cindy) and that he felt like he had ‘had enough’ and that he wanted to ‘blow their f—— heads off,’” she recalled of the Dec. 9, 2005, exchange.

    Two days later he called again and told Tsettos that he possessed a gun and planned that day to act on his threats, which he repeated in graphic language, she said.

    Later that day, Walker confronted his ex-wife outside a mall when she was picking up their son from a party, according to her petition for a protective order.

    In her account, she said Walker “slowly drove by in his vehicle, pointed his finger at (her) and traced (her) with his finger as he drove.”

    When officers in Irving, Texas, contacted Walker, he denied that he’d made the threats, according to a police report the AP obtained through a public records request. But the sister’s account was concerning enough to police that they took for “safe keeping” a gun Walker had on the floor of his car, the report states.

    A judge agreed, finding “good cause” to issue a protective order. He also barred Walker from possessing guns for a period of time.

    Grossman, her divorce lawyer and Tsettos did not respond to multiple requests for comment from the AP.

    Walker’s unpredictable behavior has carried into his chicken business, now known as Renaissance Man Food Services, according to court filings. His book itself was a shock.

    The primary distributor of his products considered severing their relationship after Walker’s book came out. Kristin Caffey, then a poultry manager for the food distributor Sysco, said the revelations in the book, as well as Walker’s effort to publicize it, created “havoc” for the company.

    “We weren’t aware that it was coming out, and we were blindsided,” Caffey, who worked directly with Walker, said in a 2019 deposition. “We had all kinds of people calling in about it, and we didn’t have answers to it,” she added, saying, “it was problematic for us being engaged with him at the time.”

    Ultimately, the company chose to stick with Walker after the negative publicity died down, Caffey said.

    More recently, Walker has made outsize claims about his business record. In repeated media interviews, Walker claimed his company employed hundreds of people, included a chicken processing division in Arkansas and grossed $70 million to $80 million annually in sales.

    However, when the company applied for a federal Paycheck Protection Program loan last year, it reported just eight employees. (It received about $182,000 in COVID-19 aid.)

    In a recent court case, Walker gave far more modest revenue figures, indicating that the company averaged about $1.5 million a year in profit from 2008 to 2017. Meanwhile, Walker’s business associates testified in the same case that he doesn’t own chicken processing plants, as he claims. Instead, they described him as a licensing partner who lends his name to the enterprise — not unlike the kind of deals his friend Donald Trump has used to expand his brand for decades.

    A wrongful termination lawsuit filed in 2018 by a friend and former manager of Walker’s company created an extensive record of Walker’s leadership. Although a judge ruled against the employee, John Staples, emails, documents and depositions in the case present Walker as a temperamental and unreliable business partner.

    Walker persistently complained that his business partners were trying to cheat him out of money, the documents say. And they indicate he repeatedly fought with his associates over his focus on branching into frozen waffles, which he believed would be a future moneymaker for the company.

    In 2017, an executive for the company that supplied chicken to Walker sent a concerned email, inquiring about $7,200 in expenses he said Walker had incorrectly tried to bill the company from his efforts to secure the waffle deal. The executive, now Simmons Foods Chief Operating Officer and President David Jackson, also cited “concerning comments” he’d heard that “raise questions about how the business is being operated.” The email does not detail the comments that raised alarms.

    Staples did not respond to requests for comment. Jackson’s office did not make him available for comment, and a message left with a spokesperson for Simmons Foods was not returned.

    In a deposition, Walker dismissed Staples as a “puppy.”

    “I’m a big dog. I don’t play with puppies,” Walker said.

    Since then, another business venture tied to Walker could also face trouble.

    Last month, a Texas bank sued Walker and another business partner over an unpaid $200,000 debt secured to help finance a pizza restaurant. According to court filings, Walker personally guaranteed the loan.

    Walker has not yet filed his response to the suit.

    ___

    Slodysko reported from Washington; Bleiberg reported from Dallas.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/lifestyle-sports-nfl-college-football-coronavirus-pandemic-5e2875eec11e93f9a3bf1fc859137ff8

    A makeshift memorial for the victims of the Champlain Towers South building collapse near the rubble pile.

    Rebecca Blackwell/AP


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    Rebecca Blackwell/AP

    A makeshift memorial for the victims of the Champlain Towers South building collapse near the rubble pile.

    Rebecca Blackwell/AP

    The search for victims in one of the deadliest building collapses in U.S. history has come to an end after four weeks. Firefighter crews have scoured the debris left on the site of the catastrophe without finding evidence of additional casualties.

    Miami-Dade Police Det. Lee Cowart confirms that fire department search crews have vacated the site.

    Officials had vowed to continue the search for people among roughly 11 tons of rubble that remained following the sudden destruction of the Champlain Towers South condo building in Surfside, Fla., on June 24.

    In all, 97 people have been confirmed dead— a significant drop from initial estimates of possible casualties, which suggested as many as 159 had been killed. That figure dropped as authorities identified remains or discovered people who turned out not to have been in the building at the time it fell.

    One person is thought to be unaccounted for.

    The only victims who made it out alive were recovered from the site shortly after the tower came crashing down.

    Identification of the remains has gotten harder as time has passed

    Of those whose bodies have since been unearthed, all but one have been identified, according to officials. However, the process became increasingly difficult due to the heat wave and flurry of rainstorms striking the area in recent weeks.

    Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said last week that remains that were being recovered could no longer be visually identified.

    “We’re relying heavily on the work of the medical examiner’s office,” Levine Cava said during a news briefing. “It’s a scientific process to identify human remains. As we’ve said, this work is becoming more difficult with the passage of time.”

    There were also some setbacks in the round-the-clock search due to the dangerous and unstable conditions at the collapse site.

    Engineers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a federal agency that investigates building collapses such as the World Trade Center, were deployed to Surfside on July 15. But the debris pile — approximately 22 million pounds — has been under the control of the Miami-Dade Police department, classified as a crime scene.

    Rebecca Blackwell/AP


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    Rebecca Blackwell/AP

    Engineers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a federal agency that investigates building collapses such as the World Trade Center, were deployed to Surfside on July 15. But the debris pile — approximately 22 million pounds — has been under the control of the Miami-Dade Police department, classified as a crime scene.

    Rebecca Blackwell/AP

    The investigation into the cause of the condo collapse could take a long time

    At least 22 million pounds of debris and concrete have been removed from the site and officials warn the investigation is complex. The caution it will be a slow and deliberate process that will take time to complete. The site has been under the control of the Miami-Dade Police Department, classified as a crime scene.

    Engineers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology, a federal agency that investigates building collapses such as the World Trade Center, were deployed to Surfside on July 15. They will to “gather evidence and determine how and why the Champlain South Tower collapsed,” Florida State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said in a statement.

    “To date, there have been multiple requests by engineers and attorneys to gain access to this site due to their understandable desire to move their civil court actions forward. However, we cannot forget that the scene and all the related materials are still under active investigation, preservation and examination, and as usual, law enforcement is in charge of the scene,” Rundle added.

    Earlier reporting showed local authorities warned residents of “major structural damage” and a “major error” in the construction of the building as early as October 2018 — three years ahead of the building’s mandated 40-year inspection.

    At the time, a local engineer found the structural slab of the 12-story building was deteriorating; it was flat instead of sloped. That caused water to pool on the surface, weakening the structure. Over decades, according to the report, the concrete began to crumble, and support columns rusted.

    But despite the troubling revelations, Champlain Tower condo residents debated for years how to tackle the issues, as well as, the $9 million price tag to fix the building’s problems.

    They were reminded of the dire findings in a letter on the “state of the building,” as recently as April. In it, the condo board explained the urgent need for $15 million worth of repairs, saying discussion of the construction had stretched for months and years.

    “The observable damage such as in the garage has gotten significantly worse since the initial inspection,” the board’s president wrote. “When you can visually see the concrete spalling (cracking), that means that the rebar holding it together is rusting and deteriorating beneath the surface.”

    She also raised alarms about the rapid deterioration of the roof, saying the “situation got much worse” since the initial report was filed.

    Documents provided to NPR show the board approved seeking a $15 million line of credit on April 13, 2021. However, the structural repairs had not yet begun when the condo collapsed two months later.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/07/23/1018164946/search-ends-victims-florida-condo-collapse-site

    “We have moved great mountains to ensure that Mr. Barrack is able to get out before the weekend so he can get to New York and appear for his arraignment on Monday,” Herrington said during a video hearing before L.A.-based U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia Donahue.

    Herrington and an another defense attorney for Barrack, Ronak Desai, joined the hearing from a vehicle outside the West Valley Detention Center in San Bernardino, Calif., where their client was being held.

    Prosecutors did not detail the reasons for the unusually large bail package Friday, but during a hearing earlier this week said Barrack presents an unusual risk of flight due to his wealth —estimated at $1 billion by Forbes Magazine — and his extensive foreign ties.

    Barrack, 74, is accused of using his high-level contacts in the Trump administration to influence Middle East policy at the direction of UAE officials, of providing them with inside information about U.S. plans and of changing speeches or other public statements by Trump to make them more favorable to UAE and one of its allies, Saudi Arabia. The formal charges against Barrack are failing to register as a foreign agent, conspiracy, obstruction of justice and four counts of making false statements to the FBI.

    The indictment is vague about how or if Barrack was remunerated for his efforts, but communications referenced in the case discussed various investment opportunities. His private investment firm, Colony Capital, has reportedly received about $1.5 billion in investment from UAE and Saudi funds.

    As part of the bail arrangement, the judge ordered Barrack to have no contact with UAE or Saudi officials, be under an overnight curfew and be subject to GPS location monitoring.

    Barrack stepped down as Colony Capital’s CEO last year and as executive chair of the firm in April. However, Colony Capital’s Chief Investment Officer Jonathan Grunzweig agreed to pledge his home as part of the bail package, as did Barrack’s ex-wife Rachelle andhis son Thomas Barrack III.

    Barrack already posted $5 million in cash, his attorneys said. The judge said some or all of the remainder of the $250 million would come from Barrack’s shares in another investment firm, Digital Bridge Holdings.

    Earlier Friday, the same judge also agreed to release on bail an assistant to Barrack also charged in the case, Nathan Grimes. Grimes’ bond was set at $5 million.

    A businessman from UAE who allegedly served as an intermediary for Barrack and Grimes with officials there, Rashid Al-Malik, was also charged in the case. Prosecutors say he left the U.S. in 2019, three days after being questioned by the FBI. Federal officials quickly got an arrest warrant for Al-Malik but he has not returned to the U.S.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/23/trump-ally-barrack-released-500663

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2021/07/23/alabama-gov-kay-ivey-says-unvaccinated-blame-covid-cases-climb/8070064002/

    Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/07/23/white-house-refuses-release-number-breakthrough-covid-cases/8074172002/

    In an interview with Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade, Gen. Jack Keane (Ret.) explained the “failure” by the Biden administration that resulted in the Taliban making advances in Afghanistan after the U.S. announced a withdrawal of troops. He warned that Taliban will exert pressure on key cities in the coming weeks.

    GEN. MILLEY SAYS TALIBAN APPEAR TO HAVE ‘STRATEGIC MOMENTUM’

    GEN. JACK KEANE (RET.): There is a possibility here with the momentum that the Taliban have gained largely due to lack of U.S. presence, particularly air power and robust intelligence capability, which gets you to be able to figure out what the Taliban is up to. That is a possibility, certainly, that the Taliban is going to take control. And let’s think about this. Certainly, President Biden, when he made the decision to pull all U.S. forces out, does not want the Taliban to take control and al Qaeda and ISIS to resurge, which we know would likely happen. 

    … 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    But what they failed to do is put in place a good transition and strategy to deal with the situation without those 2,500 U.S. forces on the ground. 

    …  

    So we have a huge problem on our hands. Half of those districts, as the map indicates, are under the control of the Taliban. Now, the Afghan security forces willingly gave some of that up because, without air power, they can’t defend… the entire country. So they are consolidating their forces around the provincial capitals, which there are 34, and they’re still in control of those. But the Taliban at some point is going to exert pressure on those capital cities. And it’s coming. They may wait until the 31 of August when U.S. forces are officially out. I think they’ll probably start to move before that. 

    WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW BELOW:

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/jack-keane-warns-of-huge-problem-in-afghanistan-as-us-withdraws-troops

    “The letter from the Department of Justice, released by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse’s office today, confirms what we knew: The FBI’s investigation into Dr. Christine Blasey Ford’s serious allegations about Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh’s sexual misconduct was a sham and a major institutional failure,” Blasey Ford’s lawyers, Debra Katz and Lisa Banks, said in the Thursday statement. “Not only did the FBI refuse to interview Dr. Ford or the corroborators listed in our letter to FBI Director Wray, it failed to act on the over 4,500 tips it received about then-nominee Kavanaugh. Instead, it handed the information over to the White House, allowing those who supported Kavanaugh to falsely claim that the FBI found no wrongdoing.”

    Kavanaugh was confirmed to the Supreme Court in October 2018, after Blasey Ford and two other women accused him of sexual misconduct, which he denied. The Senate voted to confirm Kavanaugh on a 50-48 vote.

    On Thursday, Whitehouse’s office said that a group of seven Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee wrote to Wray, asking for additional information on the FBI’s 2018 background investigation into Kavanaugh.

    “The admissions in your letter corroborate and explain numerous credible accounts by individuals and firms that they had contacted the FBI with information ‘highly relevant to … allegations’ of sexual misconduct by Justice Kavanaugh, only to be ignored,” the senators wrote in the letter. “If the FBI was not authorized to or did not follow up on any of the tips that it received from the tip line, it is difficult to understand the point of having a tip line at all.”

    Blasey Ford’s attorneys said in their statement that the investigation into Kavanaugh “never should have been an ordinary background check,” adding that the FBI and Trump administration “hid the ball on this” with regard to the 4,500 tips about the now-Supreme Court justice.

    The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the statements.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/23/christine-blasey-ford-brett-kavanaugh-investigation-new-details-500652

    WASHINGTON, July 23 (Reuters) – The participant in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riots nicknamed the “QAnon Shaman” is negotiating a possible plea deal with prosecutors, after prison psychologists found he suffers from a variety of mental illnesses, his attorney said.

    In an interview, defense lawyer Albert Watkins said that officials at the federal Bureau of Prisons, or BOP, have diagnosed his client Jacob Chansley with transient schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression and anxiety.

    The BOP’s findings, which have not yet been made public, suggest Chansley’s mental condition deteriorated due to the stress of being held in solitary confinement at a jail in Alexandria, Virginia, Watkins said.

    “As he spent more time in solitary confinement … the decline in his acuity was noticeable, even to an untrained eye,” Watkins said in an interview on Thursday.

    He said Chansley’s 2006 mental health records from his time in the U.S. Navy show a similar diagnosis to the BOP’s.

    A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office declined to comment on the case.

    Chansley is one of the most recognizable of the hundreds of Donald Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol after the then-president in a fiery speech falsely claimed that his November election defeat was the result of fraud.

    Chansley, of Arizona, was photographed inside the Capitol wearing a horned headdress, shirtless and heavily tattooed. He is a supporter of the QAnon conspiracy theory that casts Trump as a savior figure and elite Democrats as a cabal of Satanist pedophiles and cannibals.

    He faces charges including civil disorder and obstructing an official proceeding.

    Watkins did not say what Chansley was considering pleading guilty to, but defendants negotiating plea deals typically seek to plead to a less serious charge to reduce their potential prison sentences.

    Watkins said authorities will need to determine how Chansley can get access to the treatment he needs to “actively participate in his own defense.” Pleading guilty to a charge negates the need for a trial, but defendants still have to be declared mentally competent to do so.

    Watkins said the BOP’s evaluation of his client did not declare Chansley to be mentally incompetent, and he does not expect Chansley to be ordered to undergo what is known as competency restoration treatment.

    ‘CHOCOLATE SOUP MESS’

    Watkins said his client has expressed some delusions including “believing that he was indeed related directly to Jesus and Buddha.”

    Jacob Anthony Chansley of Arizona stands with other supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump as they demonstrate on the second floor of the U.S. Capitol near the entrance to the Senate after breaching security defenses, in Washington, U.S., January 6, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Theiler

    “What we’ve done is we’ve taken a guy who is unarmed, harmless, peaceful … with a pre-existing mental vulnerability of significance, and we’ve rendered him a chocolate soup mess,” Watkins said.

    Federal prosecutors have arrested more than 535 people on charges of taking part in the violence, which saw rioters battle police, smash windows and send members of Congress and then-Vice President Mike Pence running for safety.

    About 20 defendants so far have pleaded guilty to federal charges in connection with the attack, according to a government tally.

    Chansley is jailed as he awaits trial, after prosecutors convinced a federal judge he remains a danger if released.

    U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth in May ordered him to undergo a competency evaluation.

    As of July 5, he was one of 188 men and women undergoing an initial mental health evaluation to determine if they are competent to stand trial, according to BOP data.

    The BOP in 2017 was faulted by the Justice Department’s inspector general for its use of special housing units to confine inmates with mental illness, and the BOP agreed to place limits on the amount of time inmates remain in restrictive housing and to ensure they have meaningful human contact.

    But the COVID-19 pandemic led the BOP to step up its use of solitary housing units as a way to quarantine inmates to contain the spread of the virus.

    A BOP spokeswoman said that inmates are sometimes held alone in a cell, but they are not cut off from human contact or services.

    “While we do have a need to place individuals in a single cell for various reasons, such as medical isolation, they have access to staff and programming,” she said.

    These COVID-19 restrictions, Watkins said, is what led the BOP to place Chansley in solitary confinement.

    Seeking a competency evaluation for a federal inmate can be a slippery slope for defense attorneys.

    On the one hand, incompetent defendants cannot be prosecuted if they cannot understand the charges or assist in their defense.

    However, if a judge declares there is a preponderance of evidence to show a defendant is incompetent to stand trial, then the defendant is jailed because federal law requires inmates undergoing competency restoration treatment to be committed to a federal prison hospital.

    There are only three federal prison hospitals offering restoration treatment for male inmates, and the average wait time for a bed this year for men has been 84 days, according to BOP data.

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/world/us/exclusive-qanon-shaman-plea-negotiations-after-mental-health-diagnosis-lawyer-2021-07-23/

    The motion is all but guaranteed to fail in the Democratic House, but it signals a stewing anger on the right towards the speaker. The Freedom Caucus’ letter indicates that McCarthy would need to initiate the motion, and if he were to do so, it would further escalate partisan acrimony in the House that has remained high, and occasionally gotten personal, since Jan. 6.

    They argue that Pelosi’s decision to reject Reps. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) and Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) from the panel was “intolerable.” Pelosi, meanwhile, says she made the right call blocking the two Trump allies because of their “antics” in the months following the deadly insurrection.

    Banks and Jordan “made statements and took actions that just would have been ridiculous to put them on a committee seeking the truth,” Pelosi told reporters.

    A spokesperson for Pelosi did not immediately respond to request for comment.

    The group, which signed the letter simply as “House Freedom Caucus,” cited a series of other grievances against Pelosi that they argue represent “unconstitutional changes,” such as proxy voting, “insulting security measures like metal detectors,” and her decision to kick a member of the minority — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) — off her committees over dangerous conspiracy remarks and social media posts she made before serving in Congress.

    A spokesperson for McCarthy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Heather Caygle contributed reporting.

    Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/07/23/house-freedom-caucus-mccarthy-remove-pelosi-500647

    MIAMI (AP) — Firefighters officially ended their search for bodies in the debris of the collapsed Surfside condo building on Friday, even as police and forensic specialists continue working to identify human remains.

    Miami-Dade Assistant Fire Chief Raide Jadallah told The Associated Press that the fire department’s role in recovering remains at the collapsed Surfside condominium has finished. They left the site in a convoy of fire engines and other vehicles and drove slowly to their headquarters.

    The June 24 collapse killed at least 97 people and at least one more person believed missing in the disaster has yet to be identified.

    The site in Surfside is empty now, but it remains a challenge for local officials. An engineer hired to help figure out why the building collapsed warned that the site may still not be safe.

    Structural engineer Allyn Kilsheimer told Surfside and Miami-Dade officials in a letter Thursday that Collins Avenue could crumble because a remaining perimeter wall near the road could fail. The development was first reported Friday by the Miami Herald and WPLG.

    “We believe there is a potentially dangerous situation at the site, where the wall is in danger of collapse,” Kilsheimer wrote.

    All that remains of the Champlain building are the walls of the underground parking garage, around a hollowed-out foundation, and Kilsheimer says that without more support for those walls, nearby traffic could make them collapse, with parts of the street falling into the void.

    “If the wall were to collapse or rotate substantially, the retained soil under the street and sidewalk could move with it,” wrote Kilsheimer, of KCE Structural Engineers.

    He recommends building an earthen berm to support the walls near the street and sidewalk. Otherwise, the movement “could cause portions of the street to collapse and could seriously compromise the utilities under the street,” he wrote.

    Miami-Dade County is bringing in crews to help shore up the remaining underground walls, Rachel Johnson, the county’s communications director, told the Herald.

    “We are moving to procure a company to do shoring and bracing of the walls to assure there is no risk,” she said.

    The National Institute of Standards and Technology, a federal agency investigating the collapse, has been monitoring the site’s safety.

    Collins Avenue, which is the major thoroughfare on the barrier island, has been closed to traffic near the site since June 24, but town officials had said Collins Avenue would be opening soon.

    In the letter, Kilsheimer said heavy rain would increase the risks substantially because the ground becomes saturated with water.

    Source Article from https://apnews.com/article/technology-florida-surfside-building-collapse-8c92c024cab1511d130898f02cf3489a